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BLT-humanized C57BL/6 Rag2−/−γc−/−CD47−/−mice are resistant to GVHD and develop B- and T-cell immunity to HIV infection

Authors :
Lavender, Kerry J.
Pang, Wendy W.
Messer, Ronald J.
Duley, Amanda K.
Race, Brent
Phillips, Katie
Scott, Dana
Peterson, Karin E.
Chan, Charles K.
Dittmer, Ulf
Dudek, Timothy
Allen, Todd M.
Weissman, Irving L.
Hasenkrug, Kim J.
Source :
Blood; December 2013, Vol. 122 Issue: 25 p4013-4020, 8p
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

The use of C57BL/6 Rag2−/−γc−/−mice as recipients for xenotransplantation with human immune systems (humanization) has been problematic because C57BL/6 SIRPα does not recognize human CD47, and such recognition is required to suppress macrophage-mediated phagocytosis of transplanted human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs). We show that genetic inactivation of CD47on the C57BL/6 Rag2−/−γc−/−background negates the requirement for CD47-signal recognition protein α (SIRPα) signaling and induces tolerance to transplanted human HSCs. These triple-knockout, bone marrow, liver, thymus (TKO-BLT) humanized mice develop organized lymphoid tissues including mesenteric lymph nodes, splenic follicles and gut-associated lymphoid tissue that demonstrate high levels of multilineage hematopoiesis. Importantly, these mice have an intact complement system and showed no signs of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) out to 29 weeks after transplantation. Sustained, high-level HIV-1 infection was observed via either intrarectal or intraperitoneal inoculation. TKO-BLT mice exhibited hallmarks of human HIV infection including CD4+T-cell depletion, immune activation, and development of HIV-specific B- and T-cell responses. The lack of GVHD makes the TKO-BLT mouse a significantly improved model for long-term studies of pathogenesis, immune responses, therapeutics, and vaccines to human pathogens.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00064971 and 15280020
Volume :
122
Issue :
25
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Blood
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs56962678
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2013-06-506949